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[News-Head]

[ANCHOR=Shannon]

[NEWSCAST=5]
[WRITER=tbr]
[TAPE#news heads]
[GRAPHIC=NONE]

Today on News 7 at 5, authorities say they have a break as they search for the person mailing out anthrax bacteria.
(----------------)
[VO-NAT]
Also reports say American troops are now on the ground in Afghanistan. We'll have the details.
(----------------)
[Weather-Head]
[ANCHOR=Robin]
[SS=None]

Our weekend forecast is perfect for viewing fall folliage or even raking some of it! The pleasant details just ahead,

[Medical-Head]

Winston Cup driver Tony Stewart got into a angry confrontation with some of NASCAR's top brass today. We'll tell you why in Sports,
(----------------)
[VO-NAT]
and we'll see how some local students are turning junk into works of art.
(----------------)
[ANCHOR=Jean]

[Video-Open]

[ANCHOR=Jean]
[NEWSCAST=5]
[WRITER=]
[TAPE#video open]
[GRAPHIC=NONE]
(/////SOT/////)
[SOT]
[IN Q=There is no health risk to our staff...]
((THERE IS NO HEALTH RISK TO OUR STAFF OR TO ANY OF OUR READERS. THERE IS NO HEALTH RIST IN THE BUILDING. AND THEY ARE TREATING THIS AS A CRIMINAL INVESTIGATION.))
[SUPER=]
[RUNS=:09]
[OUT Q=a criminal investigation.]
(----------------)
[VO-NAT]
The New York Post is the latest news organization to be hit with anthrax.
(----------------)

[5-Carlson-Live]

[ANCHOR=Shan]
[NEWSCAST=5 p.m.]
[WRITER=syo]
[TAPE#=]
[GRAPHIC=]
Good evening.
I'm Shannon Young in for Jean Jadhon.
The FBI is making progress in the anthrax investigation.
The Bush administration says the agency has identified the Trenton, New Jersey mailbox from which tainted letters to Tom Brokaw and Senate Majority Leader Tom Daschle were mailed.
In the meantime, another news organization is reporting being targeted.
The New York Post says a woman in its offices has tested positive for the bacteria.
And investigators are still sweeping CBS headquarters after an assistant to Dan Rather was exposed.
Gretchen Carlson joins us live from New York with more.
[LIVE=Carlson Newspath Full]
[SUPER=01-Gretchen Carlson/CBS News;]
[SUPER=05-New York, NY;]
(///// SOT /////)
[SOT]
[IN Q=]
[SUPER=03-New York, NY; :00]
[SUPER=01-Lachland Murdoch/NY Post Chairman;]
[SUPER=01-Gretchen Carlson/CBS News; :34]
[SUPER=01-Dr. Steven Ostroff/Center for Disease Control; ]
[SUPER=05-New York, NY;]
[RUNS=:00]
[OUT Q=back to you.]
(( Narr: For the second time in two days a news organization in NYC has an
anthrax scare - this time a woman at the NY Post tests postive for the
skin form of anthrax.
(SOT: Lach Murdoch, NY Post Chairman)

(track)
Life at CBS headquarters in New York hasn t changed much since the
announcement an assistant to Dan Rather has the skin form of anthrax.
The Evening News is still being broadcast here and no part of the
building has been evacuated.
But there is one major difference the story that s been the lead on the
CBS news every night has now hit home.
(NAT - testing)

(TRACK)
Health officials are back inside CBS for a second day of testing. They
re swabbing peoples noses and conducting interviews with people who
worked in the vicinity of the employee who tested positive for the
disease as a precaution.
(STAND-UP BRIDGE) Gretchen Carlson Reporting
Investigators are also inside the building now because this is more than
just a health concern it s also a criminal investigation.
(TRACK)
While officials believe the anthrax got into CBS via the mail no
suspicious letter has been found. That s why environmental samples are
now being taken from various sites throughout the building. But health
officials believe it is unlikely that anyone else who works at CBS is
now at risk.
Across the river in New Jersey though a postal worker HAS tested
positive for the disease. Investigators believe she touched the tainted
letters that were sent to NBC s Tom Brokaw and Senator Daschle.
Gretchen Carlson, CBS News, New York.
))

[5-Dozier-Pakistan]

There appears to be some important strategic changes going on in the war against Afghanistan. There are reports of American troops on the ground in the northern and southern sections of the country. Kimberly Dozier reports from Islamabad.
(///// SOT /////)
[SOT]
[IN Q=]
[SUPER=143-Northern Afghanistan; :00]
[SUPER=141-Kimberly Dozier/CBS News; 1:03]
[RUNS=1:38]
[OUT Q=CBS News]
((No letup, after nearly two weeks of bombing.
And now, the conflict has intensified inside Afghanistan.
Afghan eyewitnesses claim they have seen American forces fighting the
Taliban in the south of the country. These reports could not be
independently confirmed.
(Northern Afghanistan/Mazar e Sharif pix)
CBS News has learned there is a small team of special forces operating
in the north, working with the Taleban's opposition there, the fighters
of the Northern Alliance, also known as the United Front. The
northerners have been battling to take back the strategically important
Taliban-held city, Mazar-e-sharif.
MANDATORY FONT: FILE.
US planes also have a new stopping off point for refueling - There's now
a third US air base in south Pakistan, at Dalbandin, just thirty miles
or so from the border with the Taliban stronghold of Kandahar.
(taliban presser)
Afghanistan's Taliban ambassador here said his fighters are saving
ammunition, preparing for the main US ground assault.
(Ambassador Zaeef sot)
'We are ready.'
He also says the Taliban still has no intention of handing over Ossama
bin Laden, despite rumors of backroom deals.
O/C The Taliban ambassador denied reports of Taliban rifts - but senior
diplomats here say MANY different factions and tribes are looking for a
way out. They are simply seeing who will give them the best deal, and
the most power, in a future administration. As one official put it,
that's business as usual in Afghanistan.
(refugees)
Meanwhile, the Red Cross says thousands of people started fleeing
Kandahar in the past two days - driven out by intense bombing. As one
diplomat put it, keep watching - Kandahar is where the battle against
the Taliban will be lost or won.
KD, CBS News, Islamabad))

[5-Beamer]

[ANCHOR=Shan]
[NEWSCAST=5 p.m.]
[WRITER=syo]
[TAPE#=]
[GRAPHIC=None]

The wife of a passenger aboard doomed United flight 93 says she's not afraid to fly.
(------------)
[VO-NAT :24]
Lisa Beamer spent the day flying from New Jersey to San Francisco on the same flight her husband died on when his hijacked plane crashed into a Pennsylvania field September 11th.
[SUPER=04-September 11;]
Authorities believe Todd Beamer was one of several passengers who helped fight the hijackers and kept the plane from possibly hitting Washington D-C.
Beamer says she wanted to take the flight to show people ``it's safe to get back on an airplane.''
(///// SOT at :24 /////)
[SOT]
[IN Q=Actually, I'm doing it because...]
[SUPER=01-Lisa Beamer/Widow;]
((LISA BEAMER/WIDOW: ACTUALLY I'M DOING IT BECAUSE I HAVE TO GO TO SAN FRANCISCO AND I
FELT LIKE IF I DIDN'T GO IT WOULD BE BECAUSE I AM AFRAID. AND I'M NOT AFRAID, I'LL BE CAUTIOUS AND VIGILANT BUT I WON'T BE AFRAID."))
[RUNS=:13]
[OUT Q=but I won't be afraid.]
(------------)
[VO-NAT]
Beamer used the occasion to announce the creation of a foundation in her husband's name that will help provide long-term assistance to the 22 children who lost parents on flight 93.
(------------)

[5-Radford-Accident]

[ANCHOR=Shannon]
[NEWSCAST=5pm]
[WRITER=jmc]
[TAPE#=]
[GRAPHIC=None]

An accident on Interestate 81 near Radford may cause some delays in the next few hours.
State police say two vehicles collided in the southbound lanes near milemarker 105.
No word on whether anyone's been hurt. But authorities say the accident could slow traffic for a while.

[5-State-Budget]

The second nail went into the coffin on the car tax phase-out in Richmond today.
On Monday, the "no car tax" sponsor in the House declared the 100 percent phase-out next year "a dead issue."
(------------)
[VO-NAT :19]
[SUPER=03-Richmond;]

Today, the Republican-controlled Senate Finance Committee learned of 513 million more dollars in transportation and education funding shortfalls.
That's on top of a 500 million dollar shortfall they reported during the summer.
That could meaning tapping the state's decade old "rainy day fund" for the first time ever.
(/////SOT/////)
[SOT 11:54:43]
[IN Q=We're not as far down]
((SEN. JOHN CHICHESTER/R-STAFFORD: WE'RE NOT AS FAR DOWN AS WE WERE IN 1991, WHEN WE DID NOT HAVE A RAINY DAY FUND WHICH WE CAN LOOK TO THIS TIME. BUT I THINK WHAT WE'VE HEARD FROM APPROPRIATIONS, AND CERTAINLY YOU WILL HEAR IT FROM FINANCE, THE COMBINATION OF USING THE RAINY DAY FUND AND TAX RELIEF WILL CERTAINLY BE OFF THE TABLE.))
[SUPER=01-Sen. John Chichester/(R) Stafford Co.;]
[RUNS=:22]
[OUT Q=certainly be off the table.]
[TALENT=Shannon]
[SS=Hold]

The newly reported education shortfall is attributed to new enrollments.
The transportation fund shortfall is because of lower fuel tax collections.
[(toss to R)]
(toss to Robin)
[Robin-Tease]
[10/19/2001]
[SS=NONE]ROBIN IN WX-CENTER

[WXPRO/FULL] WEATHER TODAY
TOMORROW FORECAST

[SS=NONE]ROBIN TOSS BACK[Tease#1]

Coming up after this break, Joe Dashiell will have a third installment in his look at Southwest Virginia traditions. Today he meets a woman who says she has a natural treatment for just about any ailment,
(--------------)
[VO]
and we will see how just one tooth can help forensic scientists identify the victims of violent crimes.
(--------------)
[Closed captioning]
[Commercial Break #1]

[5-Forensic-Dentist]

Identifying the victims and suspects of the recent terrorist attacks may require the help of forensic dentists.
They can use one tooth and link it to a victim based on his or her dental records.
Tonight, Health Check Reporter Joy Sutton talks to a local forensic dentist --to see how it's done.
(///// SOT /////)
[SOT]
[IN Q=In the 35 years that Alvin Kagey]
[SUPER=03-Roanoke Co.;00]
[SUPER=01-Alvin Kagey/Forensic Dentist;10]
[SUPER=03-Arlington/File Tape;30]
[SUPER=@Joy2;1:33]
[RUNS=1:39]
[OUT Q= js, news 7, Roanoke co.]
((
In the 35 years that Alvin Kagey has worked with the Roanoke Medical Examiners office --he's identified more than a thousand bodies.
(///// SOT /////)
[SOT2:03:22]
[IN Q=Teeth are very important because they survive]
((TEETH ARE VERY IMPORTANT BECAUSE THEY SURVIVE SO MUCH TRAUMA. A LOT OF THINGS WE'RE READING ABOUT NOW --TEETH WILL BE ONE OF THE MAIN SURVIVING PARTS OF BODY THAT MIGHT HAVE A RECORD TO USE TO COMPARE WHAT THE REMAINS ARE))
[RUNS19]
[OUT Q=the remains are]

Kagey says it's one of the ways victims of the terrorist attacks will be identified --because it's quicker than matching D-N-A and a lot cheaper.
And it might even help identify suspects.
(///// SOT /////)
[SOT2:13:15]
[IN Q=You might be able to tell that this work]
((YOU MIGHT BE ABLE TO TELL THAT THIS WORK WAS DONE OVERSEAS.... SOMETIMES MATERIAL ARE A LITTLE DIFFERENT))
[RUNS10]
[OUT Q=are a little differnet]

Kagey says he can learn a lot from even one tooth.
(///// SOT /////)
[SOT2:35:22]
[IN Q=If I look on here I could probably find more]
((IF I LOOK ON HERE I COULD PROBABLY FIND MORE THAN 200 INDIVIDUAL CHARACTERISTICS FOR THIS PERSON))
[RUNS10]
[OUT Q=for this person]

Characteristics like a bridge or crown or even a root canal on a particular tooth.
And all he needs is a dental record --and he can match the information to identify the person.
But just how reliable is the method?
(///// SOT /////)
[SOT2:20:09]
[IN Q=Dead-on they're very relialbe]
((DEAD-ON THEY'RE VERY RELIABLE --AGAIN YOU CAN'T SAY THERE WOULD COULD NEVER BE ANYONE IN WORLD THAT WOULD HAVE THIS DENTAL CONFIGURATION))
[RUNS13]
[OUT Q=this dental configuration]

For Kagy it can be a rewarding job not only helping families find closure --but aiding authorities in convicting suspects.
Joy Sutton, News 7, Roanoke Co.))

[5-SW-Tradition]

A week from Saturday, the Blue Ridge Institute at Ferrum College will highlight the traditions of our region with its annual Folklilfe Festival.
Music and crafts are often in the spotlight, but they are only part of the equation.
[TOSS ACROSS THE SET;]
and tonight, Joe Dashiell introduces us to another southwest traditon... herbal remedies.
[LIVE=Joe FULL MB Set]
[SUPER=@Joe1;]

learning the lessons her father picked up from his parents... and passing them on to her daughter Kimberly.
[SOT 03:12]
[IN Q=gives you energy]
((GIVES YOU ENERGY, IT PREVENTS PREMATURE BALDNESS. IT'S REALLY AN ALL-OVER GOOD TONIC.))
[RUNS= :06]
[OUT Q=an all-over good tonic.]

And the "full coverage" is just one of the weapons in their arsenal.
Using an old bus as an office, the Wild Mountain Herb Shop has built a loyal clientele of people who value the power of herbal remedies.
[SOT]
[IN Q=There are still]
((RODDY MOORE/BLUE RIDGE INSTITUTE: THERE ARE STILL A NUMBER OF PEOPLE WHO HAVE HERBAL REMEDIES WHO EITHER FIX UP TONICS OR MAKE SALVES OR SOMETHING LIKE THAT. SO IT'S STILL A TRADITION AND SOME PEOPLE STILL PRACTICE IT. AND I'M GLAD WE'VE FOUND SOME PEOPLE THAT STILL BELIEVE IN IT AND THEY HAVE A MARKET FOR PEOPLE THAT ARE LOOKING FOR THIS TYPE OF THING.))
((BURGESS LINEBERRY: WE DON'T SEE NO STRANGERS NO MORE. WE'VE HAD PEOPLE FROM ALL OVER THE WORLD RIGHT HERE IN THIS LITTLE OLD RAGGED SHOP. THEY ALL APPRECIATED IT. AND THEY BOUGHT HERBS AND THEY STILL COME BACK AND BUY HERBS.))
[RUNS= :29]
[OUT Q=and they still come back and buy herbs.]))
[LIVE=Joe /FULL]

And those herbal remedies will have a place in the Blue Ridge Folklife Festival...
[TOSS ACROSS THE SET;]
not far from a fiddle maker, Jean, who we'll profile here next Friday on News 7 at Five.

[5-Mosaic]

[ANCHOR=Shannon]
[NEWSCAST=5]
[WRITER=rca]
[TAPE#=501-03 1:13:18]
[GRAPHIC=None]
A new art project in the New River Valley is making a big debut.
(------------)
[VO-NAT :19]
[SUPER=03-Blacksburg;]
A mosaic is going up on the wall of a Blacksburg convenience store.
Its artists are from Blacksburg Middle School, Radford University and the Boys and Girls Club.
They say the mosaic is created with junk and donated items, mostly ceramic tiles and mirror.
The creation was inspired by a Philadelphia artist.
(///// SOT /////)
[SOT 14:49:14]
[IN Q=YOU LOOK AT IT]
((LYNN BUSTLE/RADFORD UNIVERSITY ART DEPT.; YOU LOOK AT IT AND YOU ARE IN THE WALL AT THE SAME TIME BECAUSE OF THE MIRROR THE MIRROR GLITTERS, THE COLORS ARE BRIGHT THE GROUT IS BRIGHT THEY WILL NOTICE ALL THE AND MADE ITEMS THAT THE GIRLS AND BOYS CLUB MADE.))
[SUPER=01-Lynn Bustle/Radford University Art Dept.;]
[RUNS=:12]
[OUT Q=girls and boys club made.]
(------------)
[VO-NAT]
The design is expected to be finished by the end of the week.
Two more mosaics are planned for Blacksburg, including one at the middle school.
(------------)

[Tease#2]

Coming up a little later in the newscast, we'll have the story of some more local artists as Jacey Birch introduces us to the next generation. Instead of brushes and pencils, they use a mouse and a computer.
(//////SOT/////)
[SOT]
[INQ=..]
[SUPER=@Jacey1;]
[RUNS=09]
[OUTQ=things have changed.]
[Stats]
[10/19/2001]
[TWO SHOT TOSS]
[WALK INTO]
[CK/CHYRON/VIEWERNET]
[SUPER=#562]VIEWERNET LOCATION

[Tease#3]

[ANCHOR=Jean]
[NEWSCAST=5]
[WRITER=tbr]
[TAPE#=Tease3]
[GRAPHIC=None]

Winston Cup driver Tony Stewart refuses to restrain himself in a confrontation with NASCAR officials today. Mike Stevens will have more after the break.
(--------------)
[VO]
and we'll see how recent events have scared Americans away from Halloween.
(--------------)

[OUT Q=News 7 at 5 ][5-Halloween]

Customers just aren't haunting Halloween stores as much as they used to.
(------------)
[VO-NAT]
[SUPER=03-Roanoke;]

Analysts say that Halloween is traditionally second to Christmas in holiday spending.
But local costume shops are complaining their business is frighteningly slow.
Like many stores, Halloween Express is trying to get customers back in the spirit with patriotic getup...
(///// SOT /////)
[**bump sots***]
[SOT 13:45 - 14:04]
[IN Q=People aren't in the spirit]
((CATHY DEMARTINO/STORE OWNER: PEOPLE AREN'T IN THE SPIRIT. PEOPLE HAVE THE WORD FEAR WRITTEN ON THEIR FOREHEADS. .... I'M HOPING THIS HALLOWEEN SEASON WILL MOTIVATE THEM, GET THEM OUT IN OUR MALLS, INTO OUR STORE.))
[BUMP SOT 3:40 - :47]
((JEREMY GILES/CUSTOMER: I JUST WANT TO BE SOMETHING REAL GROSS LIKE MY FACE SKIN PEELING. JUST SOMETHING REAL NASTY. ))
[SUPER=01-Cathy DeMartino/Store Owner; :00]
[SUPER=01-Jeremy Giles/Customer; :15]
[RUNS=:21]
[OUT Q=something real nasty.]
(------------)
[VO-NAT]

Store owners hope the next two weekends will bring more customer traffic.
(------------)

[S5-Qualify]

Welcome folks to your Friday afternoon ticker.
[GRAPHIC=EXPRESS]
The Roanoke Express is home tonight taking on the Greenville Growwll at the Roanoke Civic Center. Faceoff is set for 7:30. The Express is still unbeaten.
[GRAPHIC=TALLADEGA]
After spending last weekend at NASCAR's smallest track, the Winston Cup stars
are now at the circuit's biggest - Talladega.
Qualifying for the EA Sports 500 is underway.
(------------)
[VO-NAT]
[SUPER=03-Talladega, AL/CNN-SI; :00]
Rick Mast is trying to make this race driving a second car out of Junie Donlavey's shop.
The Number 91 Ford has a Robert Yates engine in it, but Mast was only able to turn a lap at 181 point 6 miles an hour.
We'll update you on the results tonight at six. Less than 20 cars have gone out on the track so far.
(------------)
[TALENT=MIKE]
[GRAPHIC=STEWART]
This is the first race NASCAR has mandated that each driver wear a head and neck restraint. Not surprisingly, Tony Stewart threw a fit, threatened to leave the track and for a while today refused to follow the rule. He has since given

in to NASCAR's wishes.[S5-FFE]

A number of big games are on tap for tonight as Friday Football Extra hits week number 8 of the season.
Here's the rundown of games for later this evening in southwest and central Virginia.
(///// SOT /////)
[SOT]
[IN Q=first audio]
[RUNS=:53]
[OUT Q=...LOGO COMES FULL.]
(-------------)

[S5-WDBJ]

[ANCHOR=Mike]
[NEWSCAST=5pm]
[WRITER=mst]
[TAPE#=]
[GRAPHIC=NONE]
(--------------)
[GO TO PINNACLE 6998]
Football this weekend on WDBJ-7 has the Tennessee Vols taking on Alabama tomorrow at three.
(-------------)
[GO TO PINNACLE 6999]
Then Sunday, CBS Sports and the NFL have assigned us the Ravens and Browns.
Steve Mason will be here for News 7 at Six. I'll see you tonight at 11:35 for Friday Football Extra.
(-------------)
[GO TO BREAK]

[5-Computer-Art]

The jobs of mechanics... doctors... and even food servers have all been simplified by computers.
These time-saving machines have infiltrated and improved everyday life... including that of a high school art teacher and his students.
Jacey Birch has more.
(///// SOT /////)
[SOT]
[IN Q=If you want to work]
[SUPER=01-Jimmy Deck/Art Teacher; :30]
[SUPER=@Jacey1; :46]
[SUPER=01-Rueben Williams/Senior Art Student; 1;06]
[SUPER=01-Emily Young/Senior Art Student ; 1:27]
[RUNS=1:50]
[OUT Q=News 7 Roanoke]
(((///// SOT /////)
[SOT Nat Snd 8:52:44-52]
IF YOU WANT TO WORK IN ILLUSTRATOR, CONSTRUCT THE BOX AND THEN WE IMPORT IT INTO PHOTOSHOP, THAT'S FINE TOO, COMPLETELY OPEN ENDED.
[IN Q=If you want]
[RUNS= 08]
[OUT Q=completely open-ended.]

Those of us who may be lacking in the computer lingo department might think Jimmy Deck is speaking a foreign language.
But in fact, he is simply advising his advanced art students on some of their options for an assignment.
William Fleming High School has introduced computers to the art classroom... a new extension to traditional sketching and painting... which makes the formerly impossible... possible.
(///// SOT /////)
[SOT 8:57:27-41]
IT HASN'T MADE ART BETTER, IT'S MADE MY CLASSROOM BETTER BECAUSE I HAVE ADDITIONAL TOOLS. SOME OF THE THINGS THAT WHEN I WAS A HIGH SCHOOL STUDENT, THAT I COULD DREAM OF PRODUCING BUT COULDN'T, WE CAN NOW.
[IN Q=It hasn't made]
[RUNS= 14]
[OUT Q=we can now.]
(///// SOT /////)
[SOT Stand-up 9:18:25-34]
NOT ONLY HAVE COMPUTERS EXPANDED THE REALM OF CHOICES WHEN IT COMES TO COLOR, SIZE AND DESIGNS BUT THEY'VE ALSO INCREASED THE CREATIVITY AND IMAGINATION OF STUDENTS WHEN IT COMES TO PRODUCING ART.
[IN Q=Not only have]
[RUNS= 09]
[OUT Q=producing art.]

One of Jimmy's students draws for an on-line comic book while another designed a CD cover for a local band...feats which could not be accomplished with just paper and pencil.
(///// SOT /////)
[SOT 9:11:03-11:15]
I'VE GOTTEN MORE FREE AND NOT SO CONTROLLED LIKE I USED TO BE WITH PENCILS, MAKING SURE I DON'T MAKE MISTAKES OR ANYTHING BECAUSE WITH A COMPUTER YOU CAN EASILY FIX ANY KIND OF PROBLEMS THAT YOU HAVE.
[IN Q=I've gotten more]
[RUNS= 12]
[OUT Q=that you have.]

Including the problem of being accepted into art school.
(///// SOT /////)
[SOT 9:13:30-35]
I'LL EVEN BRING A DISC WITH ME WHEN I BRING MY PORTFOLIO WITH ART FROM THE COMPUTER ON IT.
[IN Q=I'll even bring]
[RUNS= 05]
[OUT Q=the compter on it.]
(///// SOT /////)
[SOT 9:09:18-30]
I THINK DEFINITELY I'M MORE PREPARED FOR HAVING USED THE COMPUTER, SIMPLY BECAUSE I KNOW WHAT THE PROGRAMS CAN DO, I CAN GET ANY IDEA IN MY MIND AND I CAN ATTEMPT TO GO AND CREATE IT USING THE SKILLS I'VE GLEANED HERE.
[IN Q=I think definitely]
[RUNS= 12]
[OUT Q=I've gleaned here.]

And if you're still not sold on this "NEW" form of art... here's something to think about.
(///// SOT /////)
[SOT 8:56:40-45]
IT'S A WONDERFUL NEW TOOL TO USE. IF PICASSO WOULD HAVE HAD A COMPUTER, HE WOULD HAVE USED IT.
[IN Q=It's a wonderful]
[RUNS= 05]
[OUT Q=would have used it.]